I am getting sick and tired of the lunatic left using jealousy as a tool to motivate voters. The “class war” being waged by the left is sad and irrelevant.
So often we hear the rant that “The growth in the income of the rich far exceeds the middle class”. First notice that they always focus on the middle class and ignore the plite of the lower class. Second, who cares how much the “rich” are making. The progressives fail to understand that the American free market economy creates wealth. Those with money have opportunity to grow their wealth by creating new wealth, they do not need to take it from some mythical lower class. If you want to see an economic system that requires the wealthy to take from the poor to increase their wealth, look at communist Russia or Socialist Germany.
Anyways, over at Reason.org Anthony Randazzo wrote a great article address Paul Krugman’s attempt at class warfare. Enjoy: (source)
Paul Krugman must have been channeling some Sun Tzu with his Art of War inspired feign of innocence at the start of his column last week, claiming that the Presidentially popularized phrasing of the rich paying their “fair share” in society today—an idea that Mr. Krugman strongly advocates—is not class warfare. After the diplomatic argument that really, there is no war being fought by his side, he then proceed to engage in a full on mortar strike in the class war that is raging right now and that progressives have been waging for decades.
Specifically, Krugman argues:
detailed estimates from the Congressional Budget Office — which only go up to 2005, but the basic picture surely hasn’t changed — show that between 1979 and 2005 the inflation-adjusted income of families in the middle of the income distribution rose 21 percent. That’s growth, but it’s slow, especially compared with the 100 percent rise in median income over a generation after World War II.
Meanwhile, over the same period, the income of the very rich, the top 100th of 1 percent of the income distribution, rose by 480 percent. No, that isn’t a misprint. In 2005 dollars, the average annual income of that group rose from $4.2 million to $24.3 million.
A simple question in response: So what? Is the growth of the middle class so slow that they are living in squalor or with poor living standards? Why should I care if the rich made such a dramatically higher amount of money than I do? It doesn’t take away from me, who is in the top 25 percent of income earners. There is not a fixed economic pie, it is constantly expending and we can all get a slice. My rich neighbor getting a bigger slice doesn’t impact the size or taste of my slice.
Even worse though is the contention towards the end of Mr. Krugman’s column that betrays the real value position which separates progressives from libertarians:
Now, I know how the right will respond to these facts: with misleading statistics and dubious moral claims…
On the other side, we have the claim that the rich have the right to keep their money — which misses the point that all of us live in and benefit from being part of a larger society.
WHAT?!
Far be it for us to defend the rights of any and all taxpayers to keep what belongs to them. Property rights so often get in the way of a few elites trying to construct society in their own vision of it.
Backing down to earth, there is the fair point that in the midst of our national and global social contract we depend on each other for economic development. Few are the businessmen who manufacture everything necessary to run their companies. Everyone relies to some extent on others, as Leonard Read spelled out in his famous essay, “I, Pencil.”
So the businessman is dependent on suppliers and innovators of other technology to help his profit. And he is dependent on consumers to buy his product. The consumer is dependent on the businessman to provide a product in demand. And the suppliers are dependent on the businessman to buy their equipment. This is all easily observed.
What does not follow from this is the contention that, because a social contract binds all of this together, the collective have a claim on the resources of the wealthy few. By this logic, since we are all dependent on each other, why does the collective not have a claim on the resources of everyone else in society? (If only such a system had a name.) Put another way, in Krugman’s social contract, how does one define the limits of the government’s claim on the resources of the wealthy to fund its activities?
Good read, abolish the current tax code along with most of the IRS. Fair tax, flat tax, national sales tax one or a combination is the way we should be taxed. No loop holes, no exemptions just pay up, everyone. Then the so called poor class would pay their fair share of taxes along with the rich. This is a perpetual fight, it will never end. Their will always be some form of tyranny in the world. The best way to fight this is through our education system. Abolish the Board of Education, return the power to the local levels and increase the number of conservative/libertarian colleges. One of the main reasons that so many of young voters are liberal because the institutions of higher learning (so called) are full of progressive,liberal,socialist and communist professors.
Remember freedom is not free. When good men do nothing evil men prevail. Take care and have a great day.
I don’t think liberals are programmed well enough to be jealous. I guess in a sense if they want shared misery for all then that makes a case. I’ve never met one with whom you could have a fact based discussion. Useless fools, nice site, J.C.
Progressives will always rally their “troops” with class warfare. As long as there is an “Us vs Them” mentality, they retain power.
Paul Krugman is another bomb thrower and a Keynesian of the worst kind. If Milton Friedman were still alive, he’d eat him for lunch.
@glennhenson…AMEN. Good suggestions. Run for office, dude. The logic is refreshing (from a former Transplanted Texan)
@dancingczars…Every lefty I’ve ever encountered was a bomb thrower. There was no actual presentation of facts, just name-calling and nastiness.